Kazan Street, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186
The address is indicated in Dostoevsky's letter to his brother Mikhail dated September 17, 1846: “...By the Kazan Cathedral, at the corner of Bolshaya Meshchanskaya and Sobornaya Square, in the Kochendorf house, No. 25” (Modern address: Kazanskaya St., No. 2/1); and in a note to his brother Andrey dated October 18, 1846: “I live opposite the Kazan Cathedral, at the corner of Sobornaya Square and Bolshaya Meshchanskaya, in the Kochendorf house, in room 25, in the apartment of Madame Capdeville.” The official name of Kazanskaya Square has also been restored (the name Sobornaya Square does not appear on maps or in address books). Dostoevsky moved into Madame Capdeville’s apartment in the Kochendorf house around September 6, as can be inferred from his letter to his brother Mikhail dated September 5, 1846: “I went to rent an apartment and have already rented two small rooms from the tenants for 14 rubles in silver, with good furniture and servants, but I have not moved in yet.” The novella "Mr. Prokharchin" was completed here. The novella was part of the materials intended for the October issue of "Notes of the Fatherland"; it suffered from censorship during the review process. Dostoevsky writes to his brother: “‘Prokharchin’ is terribly disfigured in a certain place. Those gentlemen forbade even the word ‘official’ in that place. All the life disappeared. Only the skeleton of what I read to you remains. I renounce my novella.”
Later (the 1865 edition), Dostoevsky did not restore the censored cuts; they remain unknown to us. At this time, Dostoevsky met Alexander Ivanovich Herzen; this happened on October 5, 1846. Dostoevsky moved out of this apartment in the 20s of November 1846, relocating to the “association” of the Beketov brothers on Bolshoy Prospekt of Vasilievsky Island.
Sources:
M. Basina: “The Life of Dostoevsky. Through the Twilight of the White Nights”
Boris Nikolaevich Tikhomirov: DOSTOEVSKY’S ADDRESSES IN ST. PETERSBURG: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF SOURCES AND EXPERTISE OF LOCAL HISTORY PUBLICATIONS
http://family-history.ru/material/biography/mesto/dostoyevsky
Fontanka River Embankment, 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191187
Moskovsky Ave., 22, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013
Ligovsky Ave., 65, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191040
Karavannaya St., 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191023
Grafsky Lane, 10, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Kuznechny Lane, 5/2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Rubinstein St, 32, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Bolshoy Prospekt Vasilievsky Island, 4a, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 199034
6 Voznesensky Ave, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190000
Bolshaya Podyacheskaya St., 5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Nevsky Ave., 18, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186
Territory. Peter and Paul Fortress, 14, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 197198
Pushkinskaya, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191180
3rd Krasnoarmeyskaya St., 8b, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190005
litera A, Kaznacheyskaya St., 4/16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Malaya Podyacheskaya St., 2, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Stolyarny Lane, 16, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
27 Voznesensky Ave., Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Bolshaya Konyushennaya St., 27, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186
3 Rimsky-Korsakov Avenue, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Serpukhovskaya St., 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190013
3rd Krasnoarmeyskaya St., 11, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190005
per. Ulyany Gromovoy, 8, apt. 36, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191036
Sadovaya St., 37A, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Dostoevsky St., 2/5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191002
Grazhdanskaya St., 19/5, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Griboedov Canal Embankment, 104d, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190068
Tikhvin Cemetery, Alexander Nevsky Square, 1, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191167
Gorokhovaya St., 41, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 190031
Mikhailovskaya St., 1/7, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 191186